SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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i do not think -- steve jobs working in his career came up with stuff. i did not know that steve jobs was working in that group on the computer. we want to have space for that. we need space for innovation, it is a constant challenge. the power of the conventional is so overwhelming and the convergence is so powerful that to try to innovate is exhausting in government. let me tell you. in spite of that, i am ready for several more years of innovation. i hope you are. i hope california is. [laughter] [applause] >> for this next question, let's pretend that president obama is sitting in this chair. but pretend this is a private room -- let's pretend this is a private room. we need everyone out there to be quiet. if you were here along with the president, what are the two things you would tell him you need to make your state more competitive or all states more competitive? >> i think and i am an unabashed supporter of the president. i do not think all his policies are perfect but he has done a remarkable job of coming into an almost impossible situation in
i do not think -- steve jobs working in his career came up with stuff. i did not know that steve jobs was working in that group on the computer. we want to have space for that. we need space for innovation, it is a constant challenge. the power of the conventional is so overwhelming and the convergence is so powerful that to try to innovate is exhausting in government. let me tell you. in spite of that, i am ready for several more years of innovation. i hope you are. i hope california is....
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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. >> steve grasso, you've been in the casino name. what is your fave? >> i've been waiting for a pull back to buy wynn. it is overbought here. i'm waiting but i don't know if i'm going to get the chance. i might see 130 before then but i would be a buyer in the teens, 118 down to 11 a. >> jane? >> all right. julia borsen called it yesterday. when face tbook announced its n, whatever it is, she suggested that yelp might suffer because people would rather get restaurant recommendations from friends than strangers. and sure enough, today yelp shares were down more than 1%. >> tim? >> we talked about that, in fact, you got in my grill last night. >> i didn't get in anybody's grill. >> i thought the release had to be so sky opening that it was going to seize the death nel for guys like google -- not google, but yelp and guys that are part of the social network where people can do this on facebook. >> all right jane. >> all right, finally, it is my favorite day of the year, january 16th, today is national do nothing day. which is what they do 365 days a year
. >> steve grasso, you've been in the casino name. what is your fave? >> i've been waiting for a pull back to buy wynn. it is overbought here. i'm waiting but i don't know if i'm going to get the chance. i might see 130 before then but i would be a buyer in the teens, 118 down to 11 a. >> jane? >> all right. julia borsen called it yesterday. when face tbook announced its n, whatever it is, she suggested that yelp might suffer because people would rather get restaurant...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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CNN
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steve jobs. do you know who these two guys are? i don't know how this guy got in the picture but these two this is jim and mike. if p you were canadian like me, you'd know. these are the guys who created the blackberry. this one. which a lot of people still use. the problem with these guys is when the makers of the blackberry first saw the iphone they looked at it and said, not really, probably a flash in the pan. look at what happened. take a look at blackberry versus iphone sales. blackberry sales are the ones in the red line. iphone sales in the other line. go back to 2007 when this all started, the iphone came out. these sales were going similarly. in 2010, the reason the iphone jumped the way it was is a lot of major companies who until then had only let their staff use blackberries bowed to the pressure to use the iphone and said let's get iphones in there. iphones took off. they've come down, as well, a little recently, but see what happened to blackberry? those sales just dropped off. but blackberry's maker, research in mot
steve jobs. do you know who these two guys are? i don't know how this guy got in the picture but these two this is jim and mike. if p you were canadian like me, you'd know. these are the guys who created the blackberry. this one. which a lot of people still use. the problem with these guys is when the makers of the blackberry first saw the iphone they looked at it and said, not really, probably a flash in the pan. look at what happened. take a look at blackberry versus iphone sales. blackberry...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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steve? >> the federal reserve district says economic growth is modest to moderate in all 12 districts. that's how we normally lead but that's not the most important. what is important is the talk about how fiscal uncertainties are already hurting the economy. you think the debt ceiling is an issue for down the road? base book suggests an issue for right now. let me get to other issues first and i will get back to that. rebounding from hurricane sandy. holiday sales modestly higher but appear to be below expectations. manufacturing is mixed with the outlook generally optimistic. real estate is up in all districts and real estate growth was moderate to strong in all districts. now we get to the fiscal cliff issues. hiring times are cautious especially for companies doing business in europe and defense. hiring plans specifically delays in six district due to fiscal uncertainties. let me show you individual comments from the districts when it comes to the fiscal uncertainties. real estate contex
steve? >> the federal reserve district says economic growth is modest to moderate in all 12 districts. that's how we normally lead but that's not the most important. what is important is the talk about how fiscal uncertainties are already hurting the economy. you think the debt ceiling is an issue for down the road? base book suggests an issue for right now. let me get to other issues first and i will get back to that. rebounding from hurricane sandy. holiday sales modestly higher but...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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nonetheless, steve wynn has put a lot of resources into macau, the vegas of china. things are getting better over there. i think wynn's a buy. then there's companies like boeing, which rallied despite terrible press. all of these companies that expanded rapidly around the globe and they have been roaring despite no research-oriented news that would make you feel all warm and fuzzy about the numbers. you can even consider dell part of this trend. yes, dell, the big service company that has been hurt by this rapid expansion at a time when no one trusted overseas markets. now dell might actually go private. ♪ hallelujah and it would make sense because half of dell's revenue comes from overseas. big companies with exposure to europe is doing terrifically. both have been kept back by worries. both ceos have said over and over, it's an issue. how about ford and general motors? have you seen these two? ford may have the best chart in the book. it's screaming. company doubled its dividend and getting european losses under control while china and latin america turned the c
nonetheless, steve wynn has put a lot of resources into macau, the vegas of china. things are getting better over there. i think wynn's a buy. then there's companies like boeing, which rallied despite terrible press. all of these companies that expanded rapidly around the globe and they have been roaring despite no research-oriented news that would make you feel all warm and fuzzy about the numbers. you can even consider dell part of this trend. yes, dell, the big service company that has been...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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thank you very much steve, thank you monica crowley, heavy duty, thank you. michael goodwin tha you, that is it for us, be with us
thank you very much steve, thank you monica crowley, heavy duty, thank you. michael goodwin tha you, that is it for us, be with us
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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>> i agree with steve. health care as a whole is one of the best stocks to be in but i disagree with j&j over pfizer and if you look at the charts you'll see what i mean. j&j has had a nice uptrend and it has had trouble breaking out above the october high so the october high was around 72, 75ish. it hasn't been able to get up there convincing which whereas if we look at pfizer in contrast you'll see that pfizer has been able to convincingly break out about the october highs showing more strength from the buyers and that's why i like it technically. >> i do think that's an important point. also, let's remember. even though pfizer has done better and most phrma has done better. j&j did print a three-year high so a post-crisis high so it's doing very well itself. the reason it has done, underperformed other pharma, has been patent expiration, a victim of some very serious and profitable drugs hitting a patent cliff, as it were. >> but that's not going away, right, steve? >> it is. it's largely behind johnson
>> i agree with steve. health care as a whole is one of the best stocks to be in but i disagree with j&j over pfizer and if you look at the charts you'll see what i mean. j&j has had a nice uptrend and it has had trouble breaking out above the october high so the october high was around 72, 75ish. it hasn't been able to get up there convincing which whereas if we look at pfizer in contrast you'll see that pfizer has been able to convincingly break out about the october highs...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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coming up next, from apple to the flu, we hear from steve koben. and why your neighborhood shopping mall may be on the endangered species list. that's next on "fast." ♪ [ male announcer ] don't just reject convention. drown it out. introducing the all-new 2013 lexus ls f sport. an entirely new pursuit. with multiple lacerations to the wing and a fractured beak. surgery was successful, but he will be in a cast until it is fully healed, possibly several months. so, if the duck isn't able to work, how will he pay for his living expenses? aflac. like his rent and car payments? aflac. what about gas and groceries? aflac. cell phone? aflac, but i doubt he'll be using his phone for quite a while cause like i said, he has a fractured beak. [ male announcer ] send the aflac duck a get-well card at getwellduck.com. office superstore ink retailer in america. now get $6 back in staples rewards for every ink cartridge you recycle when you spend $50 on hp ink. staples. that was easy. >>> who does steve koben call when he needs a market technician? he calls tom
coming up next, from apple to the flu, we hear from steve koben. and why your neighborhood shopping mall may be on the endangered species list. that's next on "fast." ♪ [ male announcer ] don't just reject convention. drown it out. introducing the all-new 2013 lexus ls f sport. an entirely new pursuit. with multiple lacerations to the wing and a fractured beak. surgery was successful, but he will be in a cast until it is fully healed, possibly several months. so, if the duck isn't...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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. >> steve basic. >> mr. speaker -- [inaudible] my constituency is enb during a hideous regulatory fast thanks to the health and safety executive and the european union. the british economy is very reliant on smallnd medium businesses far less able to cope with bad regulation particularly when it's badly administer inside the u.k. >> my honorable friend is absolutely right. businesses large andsml are complaining about the burden of regulation. not just the burden of regular ration from europe -- regulation from europe, but more generally. and that ishy we should be fighting in europe for a more flexible europe and a europe where we see regulations come off. but the view of the party opposite is sit back, do nothing and never listen to the british >> you have been watching prime minister's questions from the british house of commons. watch any time at c-span.org, where you can find video asked by ministers questions and other are just public affairs programs. >> this event has been phenomenal. we have had mor
. >> steve basic. >> mr. speaker -- [inaudible] my constituency is enb during a hideous regulatory fast thanks to the health and safety executive and the european union. the british economy is very reliant on smallnd medium businesses far less able to cope with bad regulation particularly when it's badly administer inside the u.k. >> my honorable friend is absolutely right. businesses large andsml are complaining about the burden of regulation. not just the burden of regular...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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lou: steve? >> well, i don't disagree with what he is saying, i don't like language, like the gun lobby as if they are the enemy or the cause of newtown, and i don't like the accusation that president obama wants to take away people's guns, there is good ideas on both sides, let's have a little bit more of practical problem solving in washington, we ought to have guards in every school, our children are vulnerible. lou: the president will be app poe flect tick yoflect tick you. >> you are right. >> we're out of time. >> also good too. thank you very much steve, thank you monica crowley, heavy duty, thank you. michael goodwin thank you, that is it for us, be with us tomorrow, for tonight, good night from new york.
lou: steve? >> well, i don't disagree with what he is saying, i don't like language, like the gun lobby as if they are the enemy or the cause of newtown, and i don't like the accusation that president obama wants to take away people's guns, there is good ideas on both sides, let's have a little bit more of practical problem solving in washington, we ought to have guards in every school, our children are vulnerible. lou: the president will be app poe flect tick yoflect tick you. >>...
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steve. there are twelve cities in the united states in which half of the people with hiv aids lives within a year of a diagnosis of. over six to two percent of patients. with this is a problem that frankly is substantially preventable it was like the big elephant in the room and nobody wanted to talk about there were really good public health campaigns that people were really focused on this problem you know you certainly should be able to have. a lot less human suffering. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else and you hear or see some other part of it and realize everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm tom harpur welcome to the big picture. do we speak your language i mean some of the well or not at the end. when news programs and documentaries in spanish more matters to you breaking news a little turn to angles kidneys stories. for you here. in troy the spanish find out more visit.
steve. there are twelve cities in the united states in which half of the people with hiv aids lives within a year of a diagnosis of. over six to two percent of patients. with this is a problem that frankly is substantially preventable it was like the big elephant in the room and nobody wanted to talk about there were really good public health campaigns that people were really focused on this problem you know you certainly should be able to have. a lot less human suffering. you know sometimes...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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FOXNEWSW
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brian, steve? >> brian: talk about drowning in red ink, a new study finding 20 and 30-year-olds at more at risk of dying in debt than are carrying over $5,000 more in debt on their credit cards than their parents did at the same age. >> steve: how can we change this dangerous debt cycle? joining us now from nashville is our best friend in the personal finance expert department, dave ramsey. good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. >> steve: i love this first thing on this chilly day in new york city, for the young people, decide you're sick and tired of being sick and tired, right? >> yeah. don't believe stupid articles like that last one we were referencing that you're going to die in debt. what a hopeless message. the way you get out of debt is you got to get really mad. you got to get sick and tired of being sick and tired. my friend says people change their lives when they finally say, i've had it! that's it. we're not living like this anymore. >> brian: so make the decision and then you'll
brian, steve? >> brian: talk about drowning in red ink, a new study finding 20 and 30-year-olds at more at risk of dying in debt than are carrying over $5,000 more in debt on their credit cards than their parents did at the same age. >> steve: how can we change this dangerous debt cycle? joining us now from nashville is our best friend in the personal finance expert department, dave ramsey. good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. >> steve: i love this first thing on...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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thank you steve sedgwick. >>> as always, please let us know why you're awake. you can shoot us an e-mail at waytooearly@msnbc or tweet me. still ahead on "way too early," serena williams is stunned at the australian open. she loses to a 19-year-old american named sloan stephens. we'll show you why and how williams lost her cool. >>> and a little steven colbert as he offers his theory on why americans love the british aristocr aristocrats. and more on the frigid temperatures sweeping america when "way too early" comes back. >>> i have asked for this radio and television time tonight for the purpose of announcing that we today have concluded an agreement to end the war and bring piece with honor in vietnam and in southeast asia. my insurance rates are probably gonna double. but, dad, you've got... [ voice of dennis ] allstate. with accident forgiveness, they guarantee your rates won't go up just because of an accident. smart kid. [ voice of dennis ] indeed. are you in good hands? ♪ shimmy, shimmy chocolate. ♪ shimmy, shimmy chocolate. ♪ we, we chocolate cro
thank you steve sedgwick. >>> as always, please let us know why you're awake. you can shoot us an e-mail at waytooearly@msnbc or tweet me. still ahead on "way too early," serena williams is stunned at the australian open. she loses to a 19-year-old american named sloan stephens. we'll show you why and how williams lost her cool. >>> and a little steven colbert as he offers his theory on why americans love the british aristocr aristocrats. and more on the frigid...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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now it will be steve 19. there's no austerity. >> what michael is saying in a very long-winded way is don't fight the fed. not fighting the fed. the fed, europe, japan's now with b to go hog wild. >> sure, sure. >> the whole world is printing new money. >> abe, the new prime minister of japan, japan is at least discussing a new quantitative easing scheme for them. they are going to be printing a lot of yen. >> the point is all that tends to be good for assets like stocks? >> very stimulative. europe will have to start printing money as well to deal with their issues so you don't want to fight that liquidity. >> earnings don't matter then? >> earnings do matter. i think probably revenue will matter a lot more than earnings by the end of 2013. earnings matter and fundamentals matter but the backdrop is we know what we think may not be relevant or what bernanke thinks is relative, he'll keep this a liquid environment for the foreseeable future. >> jim bianco, earnings matter. steve's liked to the earnings so far
now it will be steve 19. there's no austerity. >> what michael is saying in a very long-winded way is don't fight the fed. not fighting the fed. the fed, europe, japan's now with b to go hog wild. >> sure, sure. >> the whole world is printing new money. >> abe, the new prime minister of japan, japan is at least discussing a new quantitative easing scheme for them. they are going to be printing a lot of yen. >> the point is all that tends to be good for assets like...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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david: steve jobs, i know it is unfair to compare him to steve jobs but hey, you have to compare him with his predecessor. steve jobs was always a leader. his products were always leading the market. wasn't so much what was in it. everybody had access to the stuff and chips and everything in it. it was the product he brought forth that was so different that led the market. a lot of people see tim cook as a follower, not a leader. is that a fair or unfair comparison? >> i think that's, i think that could be a fair comparison. certainly each investor has to make their own opinion. i do think it is too early to seal the tim cook legacy based on one quarter miss and certainly a little bit over a year after his death. you know i think innovation can still come back with this company. 47, 48 million units of iphones sales may be a couple million lighter than consensus and not in that range but certainly not a disasterous number by any means. it is still a very popular product. sandra: you're certainly trying to find the silver lining in all of this. we go to shibani and she is looking thro
david: steve jobs, i know it is unfair to compare him to steve jobs but hey, you have to compare him with his predecessor. steve jobs was always a leader. his products were always leading the market. wasn't so much what was in it. everybody had access to the stuff and chips and everything in it. it was the product he brought forth that was so different that led the market. a lot of people see tim cook as a follower, not a leader. is that a fair or unfair comparison? >> i think that's, i...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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steve more of the "wall street journal" senior economic writer joins me on the phone. what did you think about that? >> great to be with you. you know, the problem for chuck schumer is not so much getting republicans to get used to it. what about all those red state democrats in the senate. those are the people that are probably hyperventilating right now over what chuck schumer said if you look at the l.a. tour map, there are six, seven, or eight red state democrats that face reelection in 2014. melissa, i don't think too many of them are relishing the idea of voting for another tax increase. i wonder whether the chuck schumer, harry reid budget could pass the senate, even with just democratic votes because you have so many people that are up for reelection that are going to be very reluctant to stick their necks out and vote. by the way, as you know, we just had a $600 billion tax increase in the fiscal cliff negotiations. plus, we had $520 billion of new taxes from obamacare. this would be the third tax increase. melissa: i really hope you're right because i feel th
steve more of the "wall street journal" senior economic writer joins me on the phone. what did you think about that? >> great to be with you. you know, the problem for chuck schumer is not so much getting republicans to get used to it. what about all those red state democrats in the senate. those are the people that are probably hyperventilating right now over what chuck schumer said if you look at the l.a. tour map, there are six, seven, or eight red state democrats that face...
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Jan 22, 2013
01/13
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carol roth author of "the entrepreneur equation" and steve saks and michael from janney montgomery smith. good to have you here. let me start with you, scott. what do you think about this move? are we going to get more of this? is this just the beginning, or are we in for pullbacks considering what could be coming to washington the next couple of months? >> i think pullbacks are norm a. let's face it, the last couple of months have been a big party. ben bernanke invited us and i don't think the punch bowl goes away. >> the fed is the key issue right now. does that trump the fundamentals, all the earnings we're getting, you pay more attention to the fed? >> you think we have low growth and quite frankly investors are starved for air. they have been holding their breath for four years. there is no oxygen in any other market. there's no place to go for yield. therefore, essentially i think ben is terroristing it to the point to where they got to jump into risk assets and that's what we're seeing. >> david, does that make you bullish as well? >> david? >> we do have a david as well. david st
carol roth author of "the entrepreneur equation" and steve saks and michael from janney montgomery smith. good to have you here. let me start with you, scott. what do you think about this move? are we going to get more of this? is this just the beginning, or are we in for pullbacks considering what could be coming to washington the next couple of months? >> i think pullbacks are norm a. let's face it, the last couple of months have been a big party. ben bernanke invited us and i...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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LINKTV
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why does someone like steve heineman have the power to do this, unbridled power? why would you charge someone with up to 35 years in prison if he actually think all the desert is six months as the plea deal suggested? this happens to people every day and must have your resources than aaron and much less support, and don't have the option necessarily of even considering hiring a lawyer and going to try all over the course of two years and are forced to take the plea deals when they're not guilty or the plea deals are completely unjust. when a broad criminal justice reform in this country. we incarcerate more people per capita than any other country in the world. we do not have lower crime rates because of it. there is justice and there is justice. right now our system does not promote justice. our system is punitive. our system is unfair. aaron and millions of other people suffer because of it. >> following up on that, i want to refer to comments of the house oversight committee chairman darrell issa, republican of california, who says he wants to launch a investig
why does someone like steve heineman have the power to do this, unbridled power? why would you charge someone with up to 35 years in prison if he actually think all the desert is six months as the plea deal suggested? this happens to people every day and must have your resources than aaron and much less support, and don't have the option necessarily of even considering hiring a lawyer and going to try all over the course of two years and are forced to take the plea deals when they're not guilty...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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let's get to steve liesman who has a report on the debt ceiling. >> andrew, thanks. we want to look at the economic effects of the debt ceiling. kind of in context with what each party is saying about it and how investors might put it into a matrix to make up their minds about what is really going to happen with the question. is it a real tragedy or a soap opera? if you look up here, we've graduated this there blue to red, meaning democrat on this, republican on that side. you know, the democrats are starting to say if you go over the debt ceiling, you hit it, calamitous. and you have other words from damaging to manageable, republicans saying we can do this for awhile and it will be okay. i want to look at specific issues here. democrats say any missed government payment is a default. republicans say, no, only when you don't pay the interest on the debt. how about on the issue of can the government prioritize payments so that the incoming cash equals the outgoing cash? really the republicans -- i'm sorry, democrats saying no authority to do this and really no abilit
let's get to steve liesman who has a report on the debt ceiling. >> andrew, thanks. we want to look at the economic effects of the debt ceiling. kind of in context with what each party is saying about it and how investors might put it into a matrix to make up their minds about what is really going to happen with the question. is it a real tragedy or a soap opera? if you look up here, we've graduated this there blue to red, meaning democrat on this, republican on that side. you know, the...
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Jan 22, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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>> steve, do you want to take this? >> steve? >> i think it's pretty hard to know at this point what will stand up to the supreme court review and what won't. we just had a ruling from the seventh circuit court of appeals in chicago that the illinois wan on conceal -- ban on concealed/carry is unconstitutional under the supreme court's recent second amendment decisions. a federal court, federal appeals court in new york took exactly the opposite view. if you go back and read the supreme court decisions in heller and mcdonald, the two really important ones, um, it's -- they suggest that a fair amount of, um, latitude for the democratic branches of government to regulate guns, but they also put a definite boundary on how far those can go. so an outright ban on handguns like we had in chicago before, like washington, d.c. had, that goes too far. whether the second amendment right goes as far as to extend the right of self-defense that the supreme court found that you have in the home to when you leave the home is another question sp
>> steve, do you want to take this? >> steve? >> i think it's pretty hard to know at this point what will stand up to the supreme court review and what won't. we just had a ruling from the seventh circuit court of appeals in chicago that the illinois wan on conceal -- ban on concealed/carry is unconstitutional under the supreme court's recent second amendment decisions. a federal court, federal appeals court in new york took exactly the opposite view. if you go back and read...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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this is the administration that steve rowe this way into a third term trying to rewrite the rules around the second amendment. he can get things done and he wants to, but now he is saying his hands are tied. adam: last time we had a strike was 1979. it lasted how long? >> thirteen weeks. adam: and this one? >> they are rallying favors, trying to send people back to work, but the members recognize that their whole way of life will be gone if the provisions disappeared. adam: it blumberg was is a several of the cases were school bus drivers in new mexico and california? >> absolutely, just like what happened it was it -- rashid, it will reverberate here. what happens to labor anywhere has implications for a labor everywhere. adam: all right. we appreciate your being here. melissa will be back next time. next up, uranium. it could soon operate in virginia. now, it would be one of the world's largest, but is the nuclear energy pay off for the potential risk? even peope outside virginia have skin in this game, which is why are going to debate whether it should go forward. plus a restaurant ow
this is the administration that steve rowe this way into a third term trying to rewrite the rules around the second amendment. he can get things done and he wants to, but now he is saying his hands are tied. adam: last time we had a strike was 1979. it lasted how long? >> thirteen weeks. adam: and this one? >> they are rallying favors, trying to send people back to work, but the members recognize that their whole way of life will be gone if the provisions disappeared. adam: it...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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steve cohen, amid this big investigation on insider trading is in davos. a number of people have seen him walking around saying hello to people. i don't know if he's talking about the investigation. at a time you might think he would hide, he is out and about. a lot of people talking about who is not here almost sometimes as important as who is on the list. among those who are not coming this year, some big questions about what this means, what it says about davos. the whole google contingent, they used to throw a huge party friday nights the past several years, they opted out completely. what does that mean? bill clinton a regular is not here. and jim bryan and while we're on the air j. they're interviewing derek jeter of all things. i don't know if you can think of derek jeter as a guy at davos. they did lunch together and tina brown tweeting up a storm was actually about lance armstrong. derek said he should have admitted his mistake and moved on but that he fooled everyone, including me, i know, joe, you weren't that fooled. that's what's been going on
steve cohen, amid this big investigation on insider trading is in davos. a number of people have seen him walking around saying hello to people. i don't know if he's talking about the investigation. at a time you might think he would hide, he is out and about. a lot of people talking about who is not here almost sometimes as important as who is on the list. among those who are not coming this year, some big questions about what this means, what it says about davos. the whole google contingent,...
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that's right america is becoming a good leg what are steve jobs the founder of apple had done fifty years in prison for his blue box shenanigans in which to use an authorized on authorized advice to make free phone calls instead of hanging out with the president or of mark zuckerberg a done thirty years for illegally accessing arbors computer databases to create the first facebook and stead of hanging out with the president one of america began sending its best its brightest its innovators and electoral troublemakers not to the moon or to the nasdaq or to the boardroom but to the good leg not to university or to the white house but to the gulag when it starts doing that you know then that it is in fact a deadbeat nation a gulag nation and a shell of its former self states you never yes max this is referring to aaron swartz the internet activist the man responsible for stopping sopa the young man twenty six he killed himself a little bit over a week ago now i've been thinking about the fact that tyranny has been in the news it's been on c.n.n. the young turks m s n b c everybody's covering
that's right america is becoming a good leg what are steve jobs the founder of apple had done fifty years in prison for his blue box shenanigans in which to use an authorized on authorized advice to make free phone calls instead of hanging out with the president or of mark zuckerberg a done thirty years for illegally accessing arbors computer databases to create the first facebook and stead of hanging out with the president one of america began sending its best its brightest its innovators and...
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Jan 17, 2013
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some mid-50s to a few low 60s. >>> thank you, steve. >>> 8:14. president obama's new gun safety proposals face an uphill battle in congress. as kyla campbell reports from our washington, d.c. newsroom, the gap between democrats and republicans is not narrowing despite mass shootingses in recent months. >> reporter: president obama believes recent tragedies like those in newtown and aurora prove the time to act on gun control is now and some members of congress are following his lead. dianne feinstein said she and others will introduce a bill next week that would ban military-style assault weapons. but harry reid, a gun owner himself, does not think a ban will pass congress. so instead of putting together a bill with multiple layers, it's likely they will hold a vote on individual elements of the president's plan. >> the numbers around the country, most people favor having the ability to dairy -- carry guns. the american people want us to be very carb just what we do. >> reporter: president obama knows he needs to win over members of his own party
some mid-50s to a few low 60s. >>> thank you, steve. >>> 8:14. president obama's new gun safety proposals face an uphill battle in congress. as kyla campbell reports from our washington, d.c. newsroom, the gap between democrats and republicans is not narrowing despite mass shootingses in recent months. >> reporter: president obama believes recent tragedies like those in newtown and aurora prove the time to act on gun control is now and some members of congress are...
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Jan 23, 2013
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we've also got the survey that steve leesman came up with, the phrase i like, precarious stability. this is the first time, as he puts it, that we're meeting in davos without an imminent crisis upon us. we know the impact of the ecb's otr suggestions. we know the money that other central banks are putting in. we're through the u.s. elections, ahead of the debt ceiling debate. in some sense there isn't an immediate crisis. it's a question now whether ceos can get through the real economic fundamentals. in some ways we're betwiked and between, kelly. >> i like the scarf, ross. >> yeah. that's the point. look, there's plenty to come on our coverage today. let me recap some of the people we're going to be talking to. john lipinski, formerly of the imf. and hamish tyrwhitt, construction group out of australia. we saw rates dip a little today. suggesting there's room to cut rates. and the executive dean of peking university. we're more relaxed about china, more relaxed than three or four months ago. we'll get the inside there. all of that is coming up on today's "worldwide exchange." how
we've also got the survey that steve leesman came up with, the phrase i like, precarious stability. this is the first time, as he puts it, that we're meeting in davos without an imminent crisis upon us. we know the impact of the ecb's otr suggestions. we know the money that other central banks are putting in. we're through the u.s. elections, ahead of the debt ceiling debate. in some sense there isn't an immediate crisis. it's a question now whether ceos can get through the real economic...
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01/13
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when steve's working out, he's probably working out in $125. i don't think they have competition out there. i think this is an overselloff in the stock, gets back above the 2. the day will be long. >>> two stocks traveling at all-time highs. we'll play a little hold 'em, fold 'em when we come back. >>> sometimes it is tough to buy the lose errers. it is trading at a 52-week high. weiss. >> we talked about it before in terms of hold 'em or fold 'em. i said hold 'em. we have a fundamental shift where the government is going to pay if you go into the hospital. usage is going up dramatically, plus the company has been doing a great job. hold it. it's going higher. >> murphy, they're trading at levels they've not seen since september, 2008, highest level in four years. >> i think when you look at this name, you have to look at what they're doing. i think you're going have a shortage for food in the very near future with monsanto. monsanto is a name you should old. you should definitely buy it. >> all right. >> we are just minutes away from facebook'
when steve's working out, he's probably working out in $125. i don't think they have competition out there. i think this is an overselloff in the stock, gets back above the 2. the day will be long. >>> two stocks traveling at all-time highs. we'll play a little hold 'em, fold 'em when we come back. >>> sometimes it is tough to buy the lose errers. it is trading at a 52-week high. weiss. >> we talked about it before in terms of hold 'em or fold 'em. i said hold 'em. we...
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steve baker says brussels is bluffing government support for you know the consequences are worse for the you than they are for the united kingdom if we leave because i think we're you would become even more inward looking and really what's required is a change of heart within the nations of europe to be more out with looking and to believe more in dispersed political power quite likely that the european union will say you know our way or exit i think all sorts of horror stories will be told to try and keep us in but in the end the british public have got to have confidence in ourselves the european union's a relatively new innovation we were a great outward looking trading nation and hugely prosperous long before the european union we don't need to do this petty forty four being regulation we certainly don't need to surrender the sovereignty of the people so i think people need to just be considered and think carefully about what kind of future they want why will the euro skeptic mood on the rise in britain and many other e.u. countries it is now gaining support in the blocs powerhou
steve baker says brussels is bluffing government support for you know the consequences are worse for the you than they are for the united kingdom if we leave because i think we're you would become even more inward looking and really what's required is a change of heart within the nations of europe to be more out with looking and to believe more in dispersed political power quite likely that the european union will say you know our way or exit i think all sorts of horror stories will be told to...
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Jan 18, 2013
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steve also. >> hey, bill. >> i'm sure you heard steve go through some of those and you heard steve's characterization. here is the times. they're going through these as we speak right now. they call it a sign of an institution finally lurking into action. is that how you recall it? >> no. i don't think that characterization is fair or accurate. what we did not know but i don't think many others did either, what we did not know is that there were so many banks that had a large, huge portfolios of sub prime paper, long-term, long maturity, sub prime, financed with very short-term commercial paper, a few weeks, and practically no capital. we should have understood that better and we didn't. >> august meeting. you are the first to push for a discount rate cut and liquidity measure. some people calling you prescient today. what were you thinking at the time and how difficult was it to get others to think that way with you? >> well, as i remember, the -- i think the august meeting you have in front of you, i think it was august 7 is what i remember. >> yes. >> that was just before the mark
steve also. >> hey, bill. >> i'm sure you heard steve go through some of those and you heard steve's characterization. here is the times. they're going through these as we speak right now. they call it a sign of an institution finally lurking into action. is that how you recall it? >> no. i don't think that characterization is fair or accurate. what we did not know but i don't think many others did either, what we did not know is that there were so many banks that had a large,...
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marin county supervisor steve kinsey says the idea is too h harsh. >> i think a moratoriums are the wrong way to go. we need to educate and incentivize, be partners with landowners and we're doing that. >> it restoration efforts could cost more than a billion dollars. state leaders estimate small steps will go a long way. >> i think along our north coast it's possible to bring them back within a generation. >> jeff ranieri in the weather center, it is sure chilly outside. >> we've been talking about this three and four days. one of the colder days, daytime highs in parts of the east bay not getting out of the 40s. look at this. 49 for your daytime high in livermore. 45 in los gatos. up to 53 and 55 in santa rosa. what does it look like? from the 40s back into the tri-valley, 36 in napa. reading in the low 40s but that particular one in the mid-30s, 45 currently in downtown san jose. let's get you outside to our live sky camera network on this very brisk monday evening and you can see visibility is pretty much unlimited. i don't remember the last time i saw the sky camera sparkle like that
marin county supervisor steve kinsey says the idea is too h harsh. >> i think a moratoriums are the wrong way to go. we need to educate and incentivize, be partners with landowners and we're doing that. >> it restoration efforts could cost more than a billion dollars. state leaders estimate small steps will go a long way. >> i think along our north coast it's possible to bring them back within a generation. >> jeff ranieri in the weather center, it is sure chilly...
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report i'm max kaiser america is a frickin good lag that's right america is becoming a good leg what are steve jobs the founder of apple had done fifty years in prison for his blue box shenanigans in which you use an authorized on authorized advice to make free phone calls instead of hanging out with the president or of mark zuckerberg had done thirty years for illegally accessing harvard's computer databases to.
report i'm max kaiser america is a frickin good lag that's right america is becoming a good leg what are steve jobs the founder of apple had done fifty years in prison for his blue box shenanigans in which you use an authorized on authorized advice to make free phone calls instead of hanging out with the president or of mark zuckerberg had done thirty years for illegally accessing harvard's computer databases to.
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Jan 17, 2013
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steve liesman has more on that. steve. >> the questions are not easy. they again into sell mandics and have everything to do with if the debt ceiling is solved, and if only for investors, the most important part, what's the economic impact? let's look at some of the rhetoric. the debt ceiling, is it a real tragedy or soap opera? what we have done is graduate the screen from blue over to red, democrat ideas on this side, red on this side. democrats right now hitting the debt ceiling, not raising it. so some republicans say it's manageable. on that issue carl mentioned of default, any missed government employees, that would constitute a default. others are say no, no, we're not paying off the debt itself, that's what default is. on another critical issue, could the government prioritize its payments, take the payments, the cash that's coming in and use it to pay a certain number of things? on this side,ed article mrgs is saying no authority to prioritize, and no ability, and the treasury have different payment systems. republicans say yes, and in fact the
steve liesman has more on that. steve. >> the questions are not easy. they again into sell mandics and have everything to do with if the debt ceiling is solved, and if only for investors, the most important part, what's the economic impact? let's look at some of the rhetoric. the debt ceiling, is it a real tragedy or soap opera? what we have done is graduate the screen from blue over to red, democrat ideas on this side, red on this side. democrats right now hitting the debt ceiling, not...
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Jan 23, 2013
01/13
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sergio had not appeared, i think it's very likely chrysler would have been allowed to liquidate. >> steve rattner, who was head of the presidential task force on the auto industry, sat across from marchionne at the bargaining table during the height of the economic crisis. rattner believes that chrysler's demise could have cost 300,000 american jobs up and down the industrial supply chain. >> was he a tough negotiator? >> brutally tough, yeah. he--but that's part of why he's successful. >> in the end, marchionne and fiat got a 20% stake in the brand-new, slimmed down, debt-free chrysler plus a $6-billion high interest loan from the u.s. treasury, just for taking the auto company off the government's hands and running it. he used the $6 billion to modernize chrysler plants with state-of-the-art equipment to improve quality, upgraded 16 existing models in just 18 months, and began integrating chrysler and fiat's operations. obviously, you saw something in chrysler that you thought would fit well with fiat? >> yeah, from a product standpoint, they were the other half of the coin. when you pu
sergio had not appeared, i think it's very likely chrysler would have been allowed to liquidate. >> steve rattner, who was head of the presidential task force on the auto industry, sat across from marchionne at the bargaining table during the height of the economic crisis. rattner believes that chrysler's demise could have cost 300,000 american jobs up and down the industrial supply chain. >> was he a tough negotiator? >> brutally tough, yeah. he--but that's part of why he's...
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well later today max geyser and steve herbert expose more bankers to come out of dodgy deals looking squeaky clean. pretty carmen ortiz says stealing is stealing whether you use a computer command or a crowbar think this is how the administration her department of justice behaves towards jeremy hammond towards wiki leaks towards barrett brown towards environmentalists towards other activists however they have never let go the financial criminals they're not obeying the rule of law or even the rule of the constitution or even the spirit of the constitution they're just acting out as sociopaths and psychopaths and there are any time they get caught they rewrite the law they rewrite the rules. while get out of syria a couple minutes with a fresh edition of spotlight don't miss that. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize that everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm tom harpur was a big picture. what mystery is hidden deep the nice. visit to the north w
well later today max geyser and steve herbert expose more bankers to come out of dodgy deals looking squeaky clean. pretty carmen ortiz says stealing is stealing whether you use a computer command or a crowbar think this is how the administration her department of justice behaves towards jeremy hammond towards wiki leaks towards barrett brown towards environmentalists towards other activists however they have never let go the financial criminals they're not obeying the rule of law or even the...
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steve baker thinks the u.k. is better off outside the. consequences or worse off if you know what you're going to miss because i think we've become even more inward looking i really want to change. and. it's quite like you say you know our way or. sorts of stories it's all drawn in but in the end the british public have got to have confidence in ourselves the european union's a relatively new innovation we were a great outward looking trading nation and hugely prosperous long before the european union we don't need all these petty for regulation we certainly don't need to surrender the sovereignty of the people so i think people need to just be considered and think carefully about what kind of future they want or do i stay tuned to r.t. this friday we bring you our special coverage of david cameron's big speech on your . right a ten minutes past the hour moscow time pakistan's government has reportedly agreed to the demands of a firebrand cleric in return for ending a mass sit in of tens of thousands of his supporters around parliament a
steve baker thinks the u.k. is better off outside the. consequences or worse off if you know what you're going to miss because i think we've become even more inward looking i really want to change. and. it's quite like you say you know our way or. sorts of stories it's all drawn in but in the end the british public have got to have confidence in ourselves the european union's a relatively new innovation we were a great outward looking trading nation and hugely prosperous long before the...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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that's in the books. >> steve liesman, thank you. facebook's big reveal is about two hours away and the rumors, of course, are flying. could it be a search engine? a phone? we are live at facebook headquarters in menlo park with the latest. then, jean sperling is here with the debt ceiling debate. what that means for the economy as the house prepares to vote on a package for hurricane sandy victims. one republican congressman says we need to consider big budget cuts to pay for that. congressm congressman mick mulvanel will tell us about his big plans. first, we'll talk about facebook. julia boorstin is live with the latest on that. good morning. >> good mormg. i expect 120 reporters and bloggers to be here, to be facebook's big mystery announcement. the social network has done a great job. face book hasn't leaked a thing. i expect mark zuckerberg to unveil a new product, something to improve users''s experience rather than a back-end change. consider the priority that zuckerberg and sandberg are making, i don't think the announcement
that's in the books. >> steve liesman, thank you. facebook's big reveal is about two hours away and the rumors, of course, are flying. could it be a search engine? a phone? we are live at facebook headquarters in menlo park with the latest. then, jean sperling is here with the debt ceiling debate. what that means for the economy as the house prepares to vote on a package for hurricane sandy victims. one republican congressman says we need to consider big budget cuts to pay for that....
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that is our steve baker joining us live from london a pleasure to have you on the program and thanks for coming on so quickly the business leaders are worried are they not the exact people that cameron and perhaps you as well should be listening to. most very important we're in touch with business i've still got involvement in business myself now but it's important to remember that this debate isn't a family feud it's a really important debate about who governs us and should political power be centralized or should it be dispersed and under control and i actually don't think businessmen have anything to fear from dispersed power actually i think they've got everything to fear from centralized power particularly when it's not accountable and the u.k. does does already enjoy some special favors from the e.u. a massive rebate why does it deserve even more concessions do you think. oh this is an interesting argument why do we deserve it in the end there are two kinds of government the kind you can dismiss peacefully at the ballot box and the other kind and i'm very uncomfortable with the
that is our steve baker joining us live from london a pleasure to have you on the program and thanks for coming on so quickly the business leaders are worried are they not the exact people that cameron and perhaps you as well should be listening to. most very important we're in touch with business i've still got involvement in business myself now but it's important to remember that this debate isn't a family feud it's a really important debate about who governs us and should political power be...
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Jan 23, 2013
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to have some monster share of the overall profits of the wireless industry concerns about this post steve jobs era. >> i think there may have been a little bit of drop back in the vision. tim cook has been running this company operational for many years. the company has been so strong in the past. monster revenue number, monster revenue cap. i do think that you cannot expect each incremental innovation to be something that is simply stunning. lori: paul, walking us to apples it is earnings report. thanks again. you want to keep it here for complete earnings. sandra smith is on after the bell at 4:00 p.m. eastern. secretary of state hillary clinton defending the administration's response to the benghazi attacks. lou dobbs weighs in just ahead. melissa: we are hitting the road with the american trucking association. ♪ the boys use capital one venture miles for their annual football trip. that's double miles you can actually use. tragically, their ddy got sacked by blackouts. but it's our tradition! that's roughing the card holder. but with the capital one venture card you get double miles
to have some monster share of the overall profits of the wireless industry concerns about this post steve jobs era. >> i think there may have been a little bit of drop back in the vision. tim cook has been running this company operational for many years. the company has been so strong in the past. monster revenue number, monster revenue cap. i do think that you cannot expect each incremental innovation to be something that is simply stunning. lori: paul, walking us to apples it is...